Home / WAL-TOWN The Film - DVD
Catalogue Number: NFB539003
Producer: National Film Board Of Canada
Producers: Ian McLaren, Germaine Ying Gee Wong, Sergeo Kirby, Sally Bochner
Directors: Sergeo Kirby
Producing Agencies: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal), Office national du film du Canada (Montreal), Productions Grand Nord Québec Inc. (Montreal)
Subject: Business Studies, Canadian Social Studies, Civics, Consumer Studies, Documentary, Global Issues, Global Studies, Social Issues, Social Studies
Language: English
Grade Level: Post Secondary
Country Of Origin: Canada
Copyright Year: 2006
Running Time: 106:09
Closed Captions: Yes
Click here for pricing
WAL-TOWN The Film - DVD
Catalogue Number: NFB539003
Producer: National Film Board Of Canada
Producers: Ian McLaren, Germaine Ying Gee Wong, Sergeo Kirby, Sally Bochner
Directors: Sergeo Kirby
Producing Agencies: National Film Board of Canada (Montreal), Office national du film du Canada (Montreal), Productions Grand Nord Québec Inc. (Montreal)
Subject: Business Studies, Canadian Social Studies, Civics, Consumer Studies, Documentary, Global Issues, Global Studies, Social Issues, Social Studies
Language: English
Grade Level: Post Secondary
Country Of Origin: Canada
Copyright Year: 2006
Running Time: 106:09
Closed Captions: Yes
Click here for pricing
Six student activists. Thirty-six Canadian towns. One giant corporation. A daunting experiment in activism.
A group of six university students, calling themselves Wal-Town, take to the Canadian highway over two summers. Armed with thousands of pamphlets and fliers, and with one gonzo journalist along for the ride, they visit 36 of Canada's more than 200 Wal-Mart stores with one formidable goal: to raise public awareness about Wal-Mart's business practices and the effects of the company's policies on cities and towns across Canada.
Wal Town: The Film is the story of their ambitious, exasperating and ultimately rewarding journey.
Since the late 1980s, Wal-Mart has become an unstoppable force in the North American retail market. It is the largest corporation and the largest private employer in the world. Its growth rate is on an exponential curve that makes most economists blush.
But not everyone believes Wal-Mart's soaring success to be a good thing. The members of Wal-Town foresee dire consequences for Canada and the rest of the world if the Goliath retailer is not challenged immediately. With youthful passion, they bring their message, in the form of often hilarious cultural jams, to the very heart of Canadian consumerismWal-Mart's front door.
Interspersing frank exchanges between activists and Wal-Mart shoppers with interviews with a range of characters from either side of the issue, Wal Town: The Film takes us to the frontlines of the ongoing debate over the company's increasing dominance in the Canadian retail market. The film also creates an intimate portrait of six young activists as they experience the highs and lows of their first cross-country campaign.
A group of six university students, calling themselves Wal-Town, take to the Canadian highway over two summers. Armed with thousands of pamphlets and fliers, and with one gonzo journalist along for the ride, they visit 36 of Canada's more than 200 Wal-Mart stores with one formidable goal: to raise public awareness about Wal-Mart's business practices and the effects of the company's policies on cities and towns across Canada.
Wal Town: The Film is the story of their ambitious, exasperating and ultimately rewarding journey.
Since the late 1980s, Wal-Mart has become an unstoppable force in the North American retail market. It is the largest corporation and the largest private employer in the world. Its growth rate is on an exponential curve that makes most economists blush.
But not everyone believes Wal-Mart's soaring success to be a good thing. The members of Wal-Town foresee dire consequences for Canada and the rest of the world if the Goliath retailer is not challenged immediately. With youthful passion, they bring their message, in the form of often hilarious cultural jams, to the very heart of Canadian consumerismWal-Mart's front door.
Interspersing frank exchanges between activists and Wal-Mart shoppers with interviews with a range of characters from either side of the issue, Wal Town: The Film takes us to the frontlines of the ongoing debate over the company's increasing dominance in the Canadian retail market. The film also creates an intimate portrait of six young activists as they experience the highs and lows of their first cross-country campaign.